Brown’s water tunnels plan still alive, but obstacles are many

With a seeming vote of confidence from the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California – the giant agency that supplies water to about half the state’s 38 million residents – Gov. Jerry Brown appears set to soldier ahead with his $17 billion plan to build two 35-mile-long tunnels under the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta.

Brown’s view that the tunnels are crucial both to stabilize the Delta ecosystem and to shore up the state’s water distribution system was rejected last week by the board of the Westlands Water District, which voted 7-1 against joining in the “California WaterFix” project. Westlands – the nation’s largest agricultural water district with 600,000 acres of farmland in Fresno and Kings counties – had been counted on to cover about $3 billion of the project’s total cost.

But Westlands officials voted “no” after expressing concern both about the high price-tag they’d have to pay and about whether WaterFix truly would make water supplies more consistent and reliable. The water district was the first in the state to decide on whether to sign up for the project, and its decisive early opposition appeared to stun some supporters.

This led to reports that Brown’s legacy project could be all but dead by Oct. 10, when the MWD is scheduled to vote on whether to participate. The agency is expected to cover $4 billion of the project’s cost.

But on Tuesday, MWD leaders indicated that at least for now, they were still supportive. Board member Larry McKenney said it was in MWD’s interest to try to promote confidence in the project going forward, according to a Sacramento Bee report. MWD shares Brown’s view that the project is crucial for long-term water distribution reliability.

Brown’s would-be successors cool to his plan

Yet the MWD reprieve might not save the day for WaterFix. For months, Sacramento insiders have noted that Brown appears far more enthusiastic about the project than other significant players in state politics – including those running to succeed him as governor next year.

Los Angeles Times columnist George Skelton reported Tuesday that Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, state Treasurer John Chiang and former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa had each expressed doubts about the project. Newsom and Chiang worried about its environmental impact on the Delta and beyond, while Villaraigosa suggested bold new conservation programs should be tried to see if they could save enough water to make the tunnels unnecessary.

But even if the Westlands district, Newsom, Chiang and Villaraigosa were all on the WaterFix bandwagon, its future would hardly be assured. Environmentalists have a long history of suing and winning over California water policies. In June, they filed the first two of what could be several federal lawsuits targeting Brown’s project in response to a preliminary go-ahead given by the Trump administration.

The Natural Resources Defense Council, the Defenders of Wildlife, the Bay Institute and the Golden Gate Salmon Association alleged that the project would wipe out salmon, smelt and other fish and would worsen water quality not just in the Delta but the San Francisco Bay.

While the Trump administration gave initial approval to WaterFix, it too could prove a wildcard. House Republican Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy of Bakersfield and other GOP lawmakers from California have urged the White House to challenge water allocation policies they have long argued favor Delta fish over human beings.

While it didn’t register as significant news in California, Trump’s nomination of David Bernhardt to the No. 2 job in the Interior Department this spring suggested changes in how the federal government deals with water in the Golden State could be in the offing.

The cost to MWD would be too high relative to the real international cost of desalinization for supplying water to S. California.

Noticed that I used the word “real cost” of contract pricing in developed countries like Israel, Singapore etc. that are using international technology with a large part from the US. The reason that the prices being quoted for desalinization water in California are 3 times the real cost is to cover the regulatory BS and 12 years trying to get permits for a project in Huntington Beach. https://www.dropbox.com/s/a55uh7cv4cojvlt/Cost%20of%20RO%2008.pdf?dl=0 ( note 1,200 M3 = acre-ft or about $500/acre foot when MWD is already charging close to a $1000/ac-ft and with this project would almost double).

The state government has been using false and junk science to justify their “environmental concerns” ranging from the delta smelt to the impact of “entrainment” and killing of larval fish from removing seawater and turning it into fresh water.

Specifically, the “biological opinion” on the delta smelt didn’t include bird predation over a time period from the 60’s to present day when the population of smelt by cormorants increased dramatically as DDT (banned in the late 70’s taking decades to work its way out of the delta) allowed a huge increase in fish-eating birds and decrease in delta smelt. By excluding birds they were able to blame someone with deep pockets and not have endangered birds eating endangered fish. Of course, these same birds are doing a job on the salmon smolts but that can’t be mentioned. https://www.dropbox.com/sh/8mpn0udr2102zs6/AAD_1c9EWM3PQMGQ4OyQVW9ma?dl=0 for the graphical data.

The “entrainment” of larval fish and zooplankton by desalinization has the state mandating a specific “mathematical model” to translate the removal of these microscopic organisms into environmental impacts (calculated, not measured impacts). Their (the California Coastal Commission) demanded model (extended APF model not published in the peer-reviewed literature or validated in the field) has a deliberately false assumption built into the mathematics (yes, the main scientific authors admit that they know the assumption is false and has been known to be false for half a century, but it gives the answers of significant impacts the regulators wanted). Without that assumption buried in mathematics, the calculated impacts would be insignificant and correspond to impacts calculated by other models of a number of adult animals to produce the number of the killed larva.

Science and knowledge are irrelevant to political water issues in Ca. in the last half of century.

Chris Reed

Chris Reed is a regular contributor to Cal Watchdog. Reed is an editorial writer for U-T San Diego. Before joining the U-T in July 2005, he was the opinion-page columns editor and wrote the featured weekly Unspin column for The Orange County Register. Reed was on the national board of the Association of Opinion Page Editors from 2003-2005. From 2000 to 2005, Reed made more than 100 appearances as a featured news analyst on Los Angeles-area National Public Radio affiliate KPCC-FM. From 1990 to 1998, Reed was an editor, metro columnist and film critic at the Inland Valley Daily Bulletin in Ontario. Reed has a political science degree from the University of Hawaii (Hilo campus), where he edited the student newspaper, the Vulcan News, his senior year.
He is on Twitter: @chrisreed99.